Surprising lung reaction may explain why COVID is hard to treat

US Air Force 1st Lt. Allyson Black, a registered nurse, cares for COVID-19 patients in a makeshift ICU (Intensive Care Unit) at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center on January 21, 2021 in Torrance, California. (Credit: Mario Tama/Getty Images)

New insights into the immune response to SARS-CoV-2 infections could bring better treatments for COVID-19 cases.

Researchers unexpectedly found that the virus triggers a biochemical pathway, known as the immune complement system, in lung cells. That might explain why the disease is so difficult to treat.

The research appears in the journal Science Immunology.

The researchers propose that the pairing of antiviral drugs with drugs that inhibit this process may be more effective. Using an in vitro model using human lung cells, they found that the antiviral drug Remdesivir, in combination with the drug Ruxolitinib, inhibited this complement response.

This is despite recent evidence that trials of using Ruxolitinib alone to treat COVID-19 have not been promising.

To identify possible drug targets, the research team examined more than 1,600 previously FDA-approved drugs with known targets, says Majid Kazemian, assistant professor in the departments of computer science and biochemistry at Purdue University.

“We looked at the genes that are up-regulated by COVID-19 but down-regulated by specific drugs, and Ruxolitinib was the top drug with that property,” he says.

Within the last few years, scientists have discovered that the immune complement system—a complex system of small proteins produced by the liver that aids, or complements, the body’s antibodies in the fight against blood-borne pathogens—can work inside cells and not just in the bloodstream.

Surprisingly, the study found that this response is triggered in cells of the small structures in the lungs known as alveoli, Kazemian says.

“We observed that SARS-CoV2 infection of these lung cells causes expression of an activated complement system in an unprecedented way,” Kazemian says. “This was completely unexpected to us because we were not thinking about activation of this system inside the cells, or at least not lung cells. We typically think of the complement source as the liver.”

Claudia Kemper, senior investigator and chief of the Complement and Inflammation Research Section of the National Institutes of Health, was among the first to characterize novel roles of the complement system in the immune system. She agreed these latest findings are surprising.

“The complement system is traditionally considered a liver-derived and blood-circulating sentinel system that protects the host against infections by bacteria, fungi, and viruses,” she says. “It is unexpected that in the setting of a SARS-CoV2 infection, this system rather turns against the host and contributes to the detrimental tissue inflammation observed in severe COVID-19. We need to think about modulation of this intracellular, local, complement when combating COVID-19.”

Ben Afzali, an investigator of the National Institute of Health’s National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, says there are now indications that this has implications for difficulties in treating COVID-19.

“These findings provide important evidence showing not only that complement-related genes are amongst the most significant pathways induced by SARS-CoV2 in infected cells, but also that activation of complement occurs inside of lung epithelial cells, i.e., locally where infection is present,” he says.

“This may explain why targeting the complement system outside of cells and in the circulation has, in general, been disappointing in COVID-19. We should probably consider using inhibitors of complement gene transcription or complement protein activation that are cell permeable and act intracellularly instead.”

Afzali cautions that appropriate clinical trials should be conducted to establish whether a combination treatment provides a survival benefit.

“The second finding that I think is important is that the data suggest potential benefit for patients with severe COVID-19 from combinatorial use of an antiviral agent together with an agent that broadly targets complement production or activation within infected cells,” he says. “These data are promising, but it is important to acknowledge that we carried out the drug treatment experiments in cell lines infected with SARS-CoV2. So, in and of themselves they should not be used to direct treatment of patients.”

Kemper adds that the unexpected findings bring more questions.

“A currently unexplored and possibly therapeutically interesting aspect of our observations is also whether the virus utilizes local complement generation and activation to its benefit, for example, for the processes underlying cell infection and replication,” she says.

Source: Purdue University